I Like to Move It!

Transcription

I Like to Move It!
I Like to Move It!
Early Years Foundation Stage
Teacher’s notes and resources for a self-guided trail to explore the
way different animals move.
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Learning Outcomes
By the end of self-guided trail, pupils will:
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Learn that humans and animals move to find food and water, hunt, hide, and change
location
Be able to use their body and imagination to replicate animal movement and behaviour
Be able to observe live animals behaving naturally
Early Years Foundation Stage Framework Links (2014)
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Physical Development
Children will copy teacher’s/observed animal’s movements and create their own
appropriate movements to act out a day in the life of an animal of their choice
Communication and Language
Children will listen to instructions and respond accordingly
Children will use appropriate language to describe the movements of each animal
Understanding the World
Children will explore the diet and behaviour of various animal groups, with a focus on how
the animals move differently when they are hunting for their food
Expressive Arts and Design
Children will be encouraged to use their imagination and available resources to act like
animals
Suggested Trail
Spiders
Gorillas
Tigers
Kangaroos
Penguins
Lemurs
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Suggested activities
Before visiting
1. WHAT DO YOU EXPECT TO SEE AT THE ZOO?
Ask the children to consider which animals they will see at the zoo, and share what they know
about these animals already (what noises they make, what colours they are, how they move and
what they like to eat).
Whilst at the zoo
1. WHO AM I?
Follow the trail suggested in this resource to investigate different animals and the ways they move.
Act out their movements so that the children can understand how they move in certain ways for
different reasons (e.g. to hunt, play, hide, sleep).
Use the images in pages 5-7 to help the children describe the animal’s movements and explore
their diet and behaviour. The animals in the images correspond to the exhibits suggested in this
trail.
2. EXPLORE MORE!
This trail has a suggested route to cover a range of different animal groups who behave differently
and this allows the children to explore and act out a variety of animal movements. If your group
has sufficient time (and energy!), there are many other exhibits where you will find even more
animals and possibly more amazing ways to move!
3. WHAT DO ANIMALS EAT?
At each animal enclosure you will find information about what that species eats. Discuss this with
your group, if the animal is eating at the time of your visit, link diet to the movement/behaviour
you can see. Ask the children to think about how their bodies and movements help them
catch/find their food (e.g. tiger’s stalk, lemur’s swing and leap, butterfly’s tongue to drink nectar)
After your visit
1. WHAT ANIMALS DID YOU SEE AT THE ZOO?
Ask the children to draw an animal they saw at the zoo or even invent their own species! Ask the
children to describe or demonstrate how they move (focus on using specific vocabulary used at
the zoo).
2. COMPLETE ANIMAL PUZZLES
Print out and cut up pictures of animal’s to make-shift a puzzle to talk about how animals are
made up and to reinforce the function of each body part (penguins have wings to help them
swim and kangaroos strong legs to help them to hop).
3. ACT IT OUT!
Create finger puppets, make animal masks or simply ask the children to act as a range of animals
and ask them to take part in role play to show how the animals hunt, play, rest and how they
communicate.
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Key Words
These words will be referred to throughout the booklet and it is important, depending on
the age of your group, that the children try to use as many of these words as possible
when describing the animal’s body and how it move:
Running
Leaping
Tail
Beak
Swinging
Hopping
Scuttling
Fast
Walking
Crawling/
Foraging
Creeping/
Stalking
Crawling
Waddling
Wings
Pouch
Slow
Jumping
Digging
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Lemur
Visit our new ‘In with the Lemurs’ walk-through exhibit!
Jumping
Penguin
Visit Penguin Beach and watch our penguins as
they show you their swimming skills
Beak
Feathers
Leaping
Crawling/
Foraging
Wings
Swimming
Swinging
Waddling
Act out how the lemur moves!
Why do you think lemurs leap? To get from tree to tree
Can you walk on all fours like a lemur?
What are they looking for when they walk around on the
floor? They are looking for food!
Act out how the penguin moves!
Do the penguins swim fast or slow? Fast. Why? To catch food
or get away from predators
What part of his body helps him swim? Their wings
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Spider
Look at the creepy-crawlies in B.U.G.S if you are
brave enough!
Tiger
Visit our Sumatran tigers in Tiger Territory!
Shoulders move
up and down
Running
Crawling
Scuttling
Tail
Big teeth
Slow
Fast
Walking
Legs
Sharp claws
Creeping/
Stalking
Act out how the spider moves!
Act out how the tiger moves!
Can you scuttle like a spider?
Can you stalk like a tiger?
Can you catch your food like a spider?
Can you ROAR like a tiger?
How many legs do spiders have? 8 legs
Tigers can reach up high to get their food – can you
reach up high? Are you as tall as the tiger yet?
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Kangaroo
Can you spot our kangaroos in the Outback?
Meerkat
Visit the meerkats in Animal Adventure!
Standing
Big Ears
Pouch
Hopping
Walking
Alert
Tail
Tail
Dig
Large Feet
Act out how the meerkat moves!
Act out how the kangaroo moves!
Can you dig, dig, dig like a meerkat?
Can you hop like a kangaroo?
What are they digging for? Creepy crawlies to eat!
Where do kangaroos keep their babies? Their pouch! Do
you know why? They grow in them until they are 7-10
months old
Can you stand like a meerkat?
Why do meerkats stand like this? To watch out for
predators
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